Casio aren't planning to follow Sony down the path of interactive digital photo frames - as Sony have done with their Dash, adding Chumby widget support - but instead see the devices as a passive form of entertainment. In an interview with Tech-On!, Casio described their intent as turning the digital picture frame into the "third screen", one which can "sensitively adapt to the users' lives and environments." They've also put together a prototype to show that passive doesn't have to mean passé.

That prototype replaces the power button with a presence sensor, turning on the display only when there are people around to enjoy it. Meanwhile there's also a more complex image processing unit than you'd usually find in such a frame; that's because the Casio DPF can convert regular photos into painting-style artwork on-the-fly.

Meanwhile there's also WiFi connectivity and - despite the passivity premise - support for Flash Lite 3.0 widgets. There's also talk of more advanced user-recognition systems, rather than solely presence, which could be used to automatically pull out images to display based on who is looking at the screen. No word on when - or if - we can expect the prototype to reach production, nor for how much it might retail.